I LIFE IN ISRAEL New Arrivals European crafted cribs and furniture plus unique bedding and accessories provide the ideal background for that Very Important Baby. Bellini also offers youth furniture that grows with your child. cEs I_ IN/ Mark, Elana and Luaria Puzis and their Lada in Israel. 1875 S. WOODWARD • BIRMINGHAM 48011 1 Block North of 14 Mile 644-0525 Exercis e regularly. WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE American Heart t ip Association THE FINEST IN HOME SECURITY Panasonic 6453 FARMINGTON ROAD W. BLOOMFIELD SYSTEM 855-5822 $495 00 A IC Office Automation CA1 MAPLE (at CRANBROOK) BIRMINGHAM and up 433-3070 / ‘‘ . , . 7/ 757.,W=7- KX-P1124 $309 100 $M4i...1..il Li 1..1 / i ■ 1 I FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1990 THAT PERSONALIZED TOUCH .f., ,, PE, 25.00 SY DRAFT, INC. 44 Unique Gifts For All Ages titAidth SOFTWARE ALWAYS DISCOUNTED 30% LINCOL N CENTER 26130 Greenf ield, Oak Park WE SHIP FURNITURE cj Glue k-rnA *I 968-2620 • Customized Imprinting Always 20% OFF! • • Napkins, Guest Towels, Place Cards Cake Boxes and Matches. fl5 Bev and Sue 661-0177 FO; • Invitations For All Occasions • Soviet Couple Drives To Israel To Win Bet Haifa — Officials here were confounded recently when a Soviet couple and their 5-month-old daughter showed up at this Mediter- ranean port city in their Soviet-built Lada. They had reached Israel by ferry from Greece, thanks to the Swedish embassy in Bulgaria, which acted in the behalf of Israel. It seems the couple had started out 10 days earlier from the Black Sea port of Odessa in the Soviet Union on a bet, the booty being a case of vodka. En route, 25- year-old Mark Puzis and his wife, Elana, 22, had to sell their jewelry and the vodka to buy food for themselves and daughter Luaria. The trio reached Bulgaria, where they applied for a visa to Greece, but found them- selves in a Catch-22 situa- tion: the USSR rescinds citizenship for anyone leav- ing the country and the Greek consulate would not issue a visa with the family's inadequate paperwork. The Swedish embassy ob- tained the visas and the family finally reached Haifa via ferry from the port of Piraeus. Their troubles weren't over, however. Israeli im- migration officials told the Puns they'd have to go to Jerusalem because the bu- reau had no absorption agency in Haifa. Today, Puzis and his fami- ly live in Be'ersheva, with friends from the USSR. He works part-time as a mechanic and sings at a Russian restaurant on Fri- day nights. Romanian Jews Worry About Future Jerusalem (JTA) — The Jews of Romania are seri- ously concerned for their future, despite assurances by officials that the new government will continue to guarantee their well-being. The assurances were given to Sylvia Hassenfeld, presi- dent of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Com- mittee, and Michael Schneider, its executive di- rector, who visited Romania and Czechoslovakia. Romanian Jews, who had a stable if precarious existence under the late dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, are fear- ful of the emergence of fas- cist elements in the tur- bulent atmosphere that has prevailed since the revo- lution two months ago, the JDC officials reported. "Anti-Semitic slogans such as 'Jews go!' can al- ready be seen on the walls." Hassenfeld and Schneider met with Romania's new president, Ion Illisscu, and other senior officials in Bucharest. "Illiescu said Jews were free to emigrate, to stay or to come back, as they wish," Schneider reported. There are at most 22,000 Jews in Romania. Before the revolution, 1,200 to 1,400 immigrated to Israel each year. But unless the situation worsens appreciably, no mass aliyah should be ex- pected from that country. ( ,c-z(